I’m planning on moving (back) to Linux from Windows, but I’m not sure which desktop environment I want to use. What’s the easiest way to try them all out? Just do a bunch of dnf/apt installs? Is there a distro or project out there that makes this easier?

Looking to try out kde, gnome, budgie, cinnamon, xfce, others

  • @[email protected]
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    194 months ago

    VMs are a way, but Live USB sticks are better because you will see how it actually runs on your bare metal machine, and if there see any hardware quirks, without comitting to an install

    • navordar
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      384 months ago

      Ventoy is a godsend in that case. If you have a big enough USB stick, you can just put all distros you wanna try on it

  • @[email protected]
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    4 months ago

    You can install them all on any distro I believe. I use Arch and installing Plasma is just a single command, same with Gnome and the others. After install you can pick which desktop to use after the graphical login screen loads.

    There are some annoyances, like for example if you have both Gnome and Plasma installed, and you type Files to open a file app, you get the Gnome file app even in Plasma since it’s named Files. To use the Plasma file app, you have to type Dolphin instead.

    Same with settings app, I often open the Gnome settings app instead of the Plasma settings app by mistake since it’s called Settings.

    But these are not bugs per se, it’s just because I’m used to typing something…

  • @[email protected]B
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    94 months ago

    Why not install a live disc type image to USB and try out different varieties? Linux Mint offers three live images with Cinnamon, MATE, and XFCE.

    I quickly found this article on installing them to USB: https://itsfoss.com/linux-mint-live-usb/

    Many popular distributions offer live images so you can try before installation.

  • @[email protected]
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    64 months ago

    You can install them like any other package from dnf/apt and then run them with startX (if its X11) or start them via their name if they are Wayland compositors (all this in the tty, the black screen with just letter outputs)

  • @[email protected]
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    4 months ago

    Not sure about others but in PopOS (and I assume Ubuntu) it’s pretty simple. Probably easy with most distros.

    apt install gnome-desktop
    apt install kde-standard
    apt install xubuntu-desktop
    apt install cinnamon-desktop-environment
    apt install xfce4 xfce4-goodies
    etc.
    
  • @[email protected]
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    64 months ago

    Gentoo used to have a live CD with almost every DE / WM in it. Not sure if it’s still around though.

  • @[email protected]
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    54 months ago

    Usually when you have multiple DEs installed, the login manager would let you choose.

    Just need to make sure the autologin don’t get in the way of your choice (e.g. select it thru autologin or disable it completely).

  • @g_damian
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    44 months ago

    Grab live cd and run it in qemu:

    qemu-system-x86_64 -enable-kvm -machine type=pc \
    -cpu host -smp 2 \
    -m 4096 -device virtio-balloon \
    -vga virtio -display sdl,gl=on \
    -usb -device usb-tablet \
    -boot d -cdrom "$@"
    
  • @[email protected]
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    44 months ago

    I find sometimes installing a bunch of different DEs can cause weird cross-issues, so I tend to just make VMs to try out new things. I have a bunch of them on an external drive like little specimen jars lol.

    Also as a side note, I keep a VM that’s as close to my current setup as possible, so if I get the urge to try something weird I can do it there first and see if it breaks anything.

  • @[email protected]
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    44 months ago

    therr are utilities to install lots of isos ona live usb, flash distros that use the des that uou wanna try and you can hotswap them

  • @[email protected]
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    4 months ago

    There are a few different ways:

    • VM: doesn’t give you the “real” experience. Often feels sluggish.
    • Installation via package manager: really clutters and messes up your system. There are many dependencies, and then you’ll have 5 different file managers for example.
    • Ventoy: the second best option, or the best, if you just wanna take a look at each. If you really want to try the DE for a few days, it isn’t suited of course.
    • Fedora Atomic (immutable variants like Silverblue): there’s a project called uBlue, that provides images for all DEs. You can install the vanilla Silverblue, and then rebase to each according image. Your custom installed programs and personal data stay intact, but everything else gets swapped out cleanly. Each rebase would take ~5 minutes and one reboot, but it feels like you reinstalled your OS and changed the flavor.
  • @[email protected]
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    4 months ago

    Not sure how current it is, but LinuxBBQ has a live CD (Cream) with a bunch of WMs installed that you can easily switch between.